ATV’s fiery break-up to be seen from inside

As ESA’s remaining supply ferry to the International Space Station burns up in the atmosphere, its final moments as its hull disintegrates will be recorded from the inside by a unique infrared camera.

An ESA-led team designed and developed the Automated Transfer Vehicle (ATV) Break-Up Camera in just nine months in order to make it on board in time.

Working at breakneck pace, the team designed, built and tested both the camera and the Reentry SatCom capsule to work like an aircraft-style ’black box’ to store images, then transmit them to Earth after the vessel’s break-up via an Iridium satellite link.

ESA’s BUC camera will join Japan’s i-Ball optical camera and NASA’s Re-entry Break-up Recorder to give as full a picture as possible of the conditions inside the vehicle as it breaks up.

BUC Infrared Camera and SatCom

“These different instruments will complement each other,” explains Neil Murray, leading the project for ESA.

NASA has flown similar experiments before with its recorder, while JAXA’s i-Ball gathered photos during the reentry of their supply ship in 2012.

For ESA, this is something new, however. The challenge has been to design a capsule to survive the 1500ºC reentry and transmit useful data to the ground no matter its altitude or orientation.

It also needs to overcome the blackout effect of the blowtorch-like ‘plasma’ of electrically charged gases enveloping reentering objects.

The infrared camera, bolted to an ATV rack, will burn up with the rest of the spacecraft, but imagery of the final 20 seconds will be passed to the Reentry SatCom, a spherical capsule protected by a ceramic heatshield.

ATV cutaway

“The Reentry SatCom has an antenna, so that once ATV breaks up it begins transmitting the data to any Iridium communication satellites in line of sight,” adds Neil.

“The break-up will occur at about 80–70 km altitude, leaving the SatCom falling at 6–7 km/s. The fall will generate high-temperature plasma around it, but signals from its omnidirectional antenna should be able to make it through any gap in the plasma to the rear.

“Additionally, signalling will continue after the atmospheric drag has decelerated the SatCom to levels where a plasma is no longer formed – somewhere below 40 km – at a point where Iridium satellites should become visible to it regardless.”

HTV break-up

The latest and last of ESA’s five automated space freighters, Georges Lemaître is being prepared for launch by Ariane 5 from Europe’s Spaceport in French Guiana.

Once in orbit, the ferry will dock to the Station to deliver more than six tonnes of propellant, supplies and experiments to the orbital outpost.

Then, after some six months as part of the Station, it will deliberately reenter over a remote part of the Pacific Ocean to burn up harmlessly.

ATV-4

All previous four ATVs have met the same fiery end, but there is heightened interest in the destructive reentry process this time because it is the final vehicle.

The results will be used to confirm the computer models used to predict the break-up of reentering satellites. As one such craft, the Space Station will eventually be required to come down so there is interest in understanding the process.

ATV-4 burn-up

“The data should also hold broader value,” says Neil. “The project is proceeding under our ‘Design for Demise’ effort to design space hardware in such a way that it is less likely to survive reentry and potentially endanger the public.

“Design for Demise in turn is part of the Agency’s Clean Space initiative, seeking to render the space industry more environmentally friendly in space as well as on Earth.”

Loading ATV-5 cargo

Construction of the camera system and capsule was undertaken for ESA by RUAG in Switzerland, with its thermal protection system contributed by the DLR German Aerospace Center, Switzerland’s ETH Zurich producing its software, Switzerland’s Viasat designing the antenna and electronics, and Denmark’s GomSpace delivering the batteries.

Flying to the Station as cargo, the camera will be installed to face ATV’s forward hull five days before it departs the Station, probably by ESA astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti.

An inbuilt accelerometer will activate the battery-powered camera automatically, triggered by the acceleration of ATV’s final engine firing back towards its homeworld.